Genome-wide epigenetic profiling of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine by long-read optical mapping
2018
The epigenetic mark 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5-hmC) is a distinct product of active enzymatic demethylation that is linked to gene regulation, development and disease. Genome-wide 5-hmC profiles generated by short-read next-generation sequencing are limited in providing long-range epigenetic information relevant to highly variable genomic regions, such as the 3.7 Mbp disease-related Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) region. We present a long-read, single-molecule mapping technology that generates hybrid genetic/epigenetic profiles of native chromosomal DNA. The genome-wide distribution of 5- hmC in human peripheral blood cells correlates well with 5-hmC DNA immunoprecipitation (hMeDIP) sequencing. However, the long read length of 100 kbp-1Mbp produces 5-hmC profiles across variable genomic regions that failed to showup in the sequencing data. In addition, optical 5-hmC mapping shows strong correlation between the 5-hmC density in gene bodies and the corresponding level of gene expression. The single molecule concept provides information on the distribution and coexistence of 5-hmC signals at multiple genomic loci on the same genomic DNA molecule, revealing long-range correlations and cell-to-cell epigenetic variation.
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